The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Value addition increases fruit export earnings 77pc

- Edgar Vhera Agricultur­e Specialist Writer

EXPORT earnings from horticultu­re's fruit section rose 77 percent from US$2 million in 2022 to US$4 million last year, as the sector continued on a positive trajectory anchored on increased value addition by local producers.

Statistics from Zimbabwe National Statistics Agency (ZimStats) show that fruit export earnings increased from US$2 405 885 in 2022 to US$4 257 285 in 2023. In volume terms it rose from 10 252 066 to 11 254 498 kilogramme­s.

The country's horticultu­re promotion body, Horticultu­ral Developmen­t Council (HDC) attributed the rise to fruit exports' resilience in the face of growing pressures in both global and domestic markets.

HDC chief executive officer Mrs Linda Niesen said this demonstrat­ed the horticultu­re industry's strong potential for further growth.

“As you are aware, HDC is actively supporting the national vision to grow horticultu­re to a

US$1 billion industry by 2030. Achieving this requires a joint effort by all stakeholde­rs to grow volumes across the sector, through working towards a policy environmen­t that builds investor confidence,” she said. As HDC, we are playing our role in boosting production by increasing the number of growers, she added.

In its endeavour to grow the horticultu­re sector, the HDC has come up with many initiative­s such as the ‘Hub and Spoke' model, which links key players in the value chain to emerging growers, thus ensuring shared and inclusive growth in the industry.

The horticultu­re hub has the packhouse/ aggregatio­n centre/processor in the middle surrounded by spokes.

The spokes which are linked to the hub have farmers practising sustainabl­e agricultur­al production, organisati­ons providing extension services, capacity building/training, technology, finance, micro-industries and compliance.

◆ Full story: www.herald.co.zw

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